PHILADELPHIA (CBS) — You may have walked by and never noticed it, but there is the coolest little museum at Broad and Walnut Streets in center city.

The Wells Fargo History Museum, at 123 South Broad Street, features a number of exhibits including a full-sized stagecoach!

“You can get inside of it and it rocks back and forth,” Candice Helgeson (top photo), the museum manager, says of a replica you can climb into. “It gives you the motion that you would have felt if you were actually going out on a 24-day journey across the country. You can also get your picture taken in front of it.”

(The bank has a full-sized stagecoach in its lobby at Broad and Walnut.)

Helgeson says that the Wells Fargo name dates back to 1852, but it started as a much different company than it is today.

“With the westward migration and the gold rush era, they really saw an opportunity to be able to take business out west, so Henry Wells and William Fargo began the company, and they began shipping people, goods, and money by stagecoach.”

(Exhibits include a strongbox, a guard’s uniform, and samples of products that were carried on stagecoaches. Credit: Lauren Lipton)

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Lots of things to see, do, and learn here.

“We have a lot of interactives,” Helgeson says. “This one is actually a gold-panning game; it’s an interactive touchscreen, you have two different gold pans, and you can push the gold into the pans and rock it back and forth. One of our other interactives is that you can get your face printed on old money.”

Helgeson says the museum includes artifacts from Wells Fargo’s early days.

“This is a treasure box, an example of what would have been put under the driver’s seat or the shotgun guard’s seat to transport the gold, the money. You’ve heard the term, ‘I want shotgun’ when you’re getting in the front seat? It actually comes from the stagecoach days.”